Sometimes the most important answers lie where the childhood memories clash with the disclosure and acceptance of oneself. Tangled up in his own self, Arshak is looking for the answers in his childhood memories. He’s as close to the self-acceptance as to the running in circles. What will he choose? And how will the memories from the 90s define his life?

This story is about a journalist who has entered into a professional conflict with the fawning and submissive administration of the TV channel he works for…. On the way to his paternal home he recounts his childhood memories of hard times during early 90s when Armenia was at war. Confrontation with his own past helps him to regain himself and make the right decision.

Anna Arevshatyan was born in 1985 in Yerevan, Armenia. She graduated from Armenian-Russian (Slavonic) University, Faculty of Journalism in 2007. In 2010 she entered the High Courses for Scriptwriters and Film Directors (A. Surikova and V. Fokin workshop), Department of Directing, Moscow. Bari Luys (Good Morning) is her first feature-length fiction.